Bangkok Post

Man stabs three Israeli policemen

FEARS GROW OF FULL-SCALE UPRISING AS WAVE OF DEADLY VIOLENCE RAGES ON

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JERUSALEM: A man stabbed three police officers outside the Old City in east Jerusalem before being shot dead by security forces, police said, in yesterday’s second such attack in the same area.

One of the officers was in a serious condition and two others were moderately hurt, police said, referring to the attacker as an “Arab terrorist”.

The attack took place by the Damascus Gate, metres away from where a Palestinia­n teen stabbed two Jews before being shot dead by police officers earlier in the day.

Earlier, Israeli security forces shot dead two Palestinia­ns in East Jerusalem yesterday, one of whom had stabbed two Israelis, police said, in a further wave of violence that has raised concerns about a new Palestinia­n uprising. Police said two ultra-Orthodox Jewish men were wounded in the knife attack by a 16-year-old Palestinia­n near Jerusalem’s walled Old City. Before that, paramilita­ry police shot dead a militant who had opened fire at them during late-night clashes at the Palestinia­n Shuafat refugee camp, police said.

Hamas, the Islamist Palestinia­n militant group that controls the Gaza Strip, said in a statement that the Shuafat shooter was one of its members. “The hero martyr fought the Israeli occupation with language they understand,” Hamas said.

Tensions have surged in 11 days of violence in which four Israelis and 17 Palestinia­ns — including several Palestinia­ns shot by police, have been killed in Jerusalem, the Israeli-occupied West Bank, Gaza and in Israeli cities.

Scores of Palestinia­ns have been injured in clashes with Israeli troops and at least 12 Israelis have been wounded in almost daily Palestinia­n stabbing attacks.

The violence has been fuelled by Palestinia­n fears that visits by Jewish groups, including lawmakers, to the Jerusalem Old City plaza revered in Judaism as the site of two destroyed biblical temples are eroding Muslim religious control of the al-Aqsa mosque compound, Islam’s third holiest shrine.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said repeatedly he will not allow any change to the arrangemen­ts under which Jews are allowed to visit the site but non-Muslim prayer is banned.

His assurances over conditions at the site, known as Temple Mount to Jews and Noble Sanctuary to Muslims, have done little to quell alarm among Muslims across the region. The violence is not of the intensity of two Palestinia­n uprisings in the late 1980s and early 2000s but it has prompted talk of a third “intifada”.

On Friday Israeli soldiers shot dead seven Palestinia­ns in protests near the Gaza border and a knife-wielding Israeli wounded four Arabs in the southern Israeli town of Dimona. In the northern town of Afula, an Israeli-Arab woman was shot several times and wounded by police who closed in on her as she held up a knife, a video clip circulated on social media showed. Police said she had tried to stab a bus station guard.

In Jerusalem’s Old City, a Palestinia­n stabbed and wounded a 14-year-old Jewish boy and, near a Jewish settlement in the West Bank city of Hebron, a Palestinia­n stabbed an Israeli policeman before being shot dead.

There was also violence in the West Bank city of Ramallah, with video footage showing an Israeli army jeep running over a stone-throwing Palestinia­n, who was injured.

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